For details on last year’s trip – see here for the initial call out, here for the agenda, and here for the concluding write-up.
For Payment only
Job Opening: Join the Movement as a Director of Programs
The Jakara Movement with the Guru’s Nadir (Grace), seva of our volunteers, and the baksh (benediction) of the Sangat we are pleased to announce our first employment position. We are seeking a part-time Director of Programs to help coordinate the gambit of Jakara Movement projects – from mentoring, to social services, to leadership development, to educational programs and community-service projects. This is an important position that will offer someone a chance to create the culture and help coordinate a growing youth movement.
Position Title: Director of Programs
Organizational Relationship: Reporting to the Executive Council
General Summary:
The director of programs is responsible for the implementation, management, supervision and evaluation of all the organization’s programs in accordance with the goals set out by the organization. As a member of the senior management team, the director of programs participates in strategic planning and budgeting initiatives in addition to problem solving. He/she works within the guidelines, policies and mission of the organization and will be accountable and responsible for specific projects as assigned.
Essential Duties and Responsibilities:
1. Human Resource Management
2. Program Delivery
This year’s topic reflects on a “Community for Equality” – celebrating Mata Khivi Day. Mata Khivi was the wife of the second Guru, Guru Angad Ji. She was a leader, administrator, and comforter for all. So celebrated was Mata Khivi that a Shabad in the Guru Granth Sahib pays homage to her skills. She is noble (nek) and is compared to the shade (chaao) that protects all. It is Mata Khivi that distributes the treasures of the Langar. So much is she celebrated in this particular shabad, that even Guru Angad is blessed not by using his name, but by referring to him as the ‘husband of Mother Khivi.’ See the shabad here.
The camp celebrates equality for all. It also explores key issues such as body-image and internet safety with women; and anger management and composure for boys.
The following are the confirmed dates at various locations of the camps. If you’d like to get involved at particular camps, write a message and we’ll put you in touch with regional leads. More camp listings will follow as they confirm their dates. If your city is not listed, make it happen! Send us a message and we’ll get in touch with you ASAP will all the materials you need (content, training materials, T-shirts, etc.) You be the change you wish to see. Stay up to date here for changes and additional camps. We’ll keep adding them as we get date confirmations. Together, we are the movement. Gur Fateh!
San Diego, October 15th – check out the pics!
San Jose, October 22nd – check out the pics!
Kerman, October 22nd – check out the pics!
Stockton, October 22nd
Caruthers, November 12th
Fremont, November 12th
West Sac – Sacramento, November 12th
Bradshaw – Sacramento, November 19th
Khalsa Care Foundation (San Fernando Valley), November 19th
Fresno, November 19th
Yuba City, November 19th
New York, November 20th
Bakersfield, November 26th
Toronto, November 26th
Ft. Lauderdale, January 21st
This year, as in the past 3 years, members of the Jakara Movement flew across the US to participate in the 16th annual North American Sikh Medical and Dental Association (NASMDA) conference in the ‘City of Brotherly Love’ – Philadelphia.
This year as in every year, we left humbled by the generosity displayed by our community. One particular brother from Florida left us in awe. We left challenged by engaging conversations with our brothers and sisters. We left inspired by the amazing seva our Sikh brothers and sisters are doing across the US (pagh salute to Rucha Kaur and the United Sikhs team at Richmond Hills Gurdwara and so many others from that evening). However, we also left puzzled by the lack of participation by young health and medical professionals in our community. NASMDA has attempted to bring in more ‘young blood’ through its offering of scholarships and grants, especially to medical students. We hope that other young Sikh health professionals get involved and help shape the organization to become an important institution.
While the organization decides where its annual conference will be held next year, we, as part of the Jakara Movement, seek for this organization to realize its potential. We aim to help it grow. Sikh-Americans are far too overrepresented in the field of medicine to not be able to take on creative, innovative, and Gurmat-oriented initiatives. If the conference does come to the west coast, next year, we will seek to bring a contingent of over 25 new medical and pre-medical students for this unique opportunity to network, reflect on health from a Sikh perspective, and begin re-thinking the role Sikhi and Sikhs can play in the field of medicine in the United States. Be prepared to hear more from us about this soon!
For the past two years, the Jakara Movement has created a forum for budding scholars and researchers, working on various projects Sikh, to come together, share, and challenge each one another.
Over this period, it has become an extremely popular venue for community members, activists, and researchers to come together to engage on relevant issues. From Khalistan to Unix Coding, from sex-selective abortion to diasporic literature, from Nihangs in the court of Ranjit Singh to the historiography of Sikh studies, from Sikh sculpture and architecture to representations of masculinity in Punjabi films, from ecology of pre-Green Revolution Punjab to excerpts from a new book on Sikhs in Surrey to an amazing thabla-jazz infusion display, to even previews of newly-released movies with Sikh themes – there will be something that captivates and challenges you over the weekend. Please see previous abstracts from conferences 2010 and 2011 for more details.
The “call for papers” for Sikholars 2012 has now begun. From now until December 1, 2011 please send your resume/cv and abstract to info @ sikholars [dot] org. The conference will be held over the President’s Day weekend from February 17-19, 2012 at CSU East Bay. It is being sponsored by CSU East Bay’s Ethnic Studies Department, Sabherwal Chair of Sikh and Punjabi Studies, and the Jakara Movement.
Last year, 100+ community members came to participate and converse. It was partially from these conversations that the spark to begin a Sikh feminist conference – SAFAR – was conceived. We expect an even greater attendance this year with more amazing papers. Be part of the conversation and mark your calendars for this unique experience.